Not sure. It's a dh-200. The manual was copyrighted in 1980. I got several of these from ebay for my HT. They seem to work OK. When I hang the scope on the caps I see a pretty typical sawtooth. It would be nice to have a simple go/no go test.
Dennis

Go ahead and replace them. While you are at it, here are some fairly inexpensive upgrades for a DH200.
1. Attach some thermistors on the Power supply (the start up is hard on the Hafler switch)
2. fabricate a heavier bus on the PS caps (rather than the small wire that is currently there).
3. Attach (parallel) small bypass caps on the PS caps.

These are all documented on this forum - do a search.

If you are more adventurous, then,
4. there a few other caps that can be upgraded and bypassed. Again, search the threads. Also check the bias and re-set to factory specs.

These are fairly simple and will clean up the bass a bit (#3) and make the mids a bit clearer (#4).

Some how I knew replacement would be the consensus. For those who might be interested, I found a guy on ebay selling 18K Hafler replacement caps for $50 a pair. I found a capacitor upgrade kit for the pc board as well. Just search Hafler in electronics. Thanks for the other tips. I will look them up.
Dennis

Sounds like your main power supply caps are still usable; determining the quality of the smaller decoupling caps is a little harder. In my experience, these fail at least as often as the big caps, depending on the temperatures they were exposed to. At this point, I'd buy up a supply of suitable caps (including bipolar caps for the feedback network and any input coupling) and replace them at your leisure, saving the big caps for last and follow some of the upgrading procedures recommended here.

After that, if you're still motivated, the resistors are probably good candidates for replacement; they were probably carbon film and maybe some composition. Quality metal films might be installed in the feedback network and that's what I'd recommend for the rest of the amplifier, starting with the input section.